Hand Held Products Dolphin 9500 User Manual page 160

Dolphin 9500 series
Hide thumbs Also See for Dolphin 9500:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

How 802.1X Works
The network elements in the above graphics are those involved in a typical wireless LAN. When 802.1X is running, a wireless
device must authenticate itself with the access point in order to get access to the Existing LAN. With respect to the terms used
in the 802.1X standard, access points (APs) function as authenticators and wireless devices function as supplicants. The
authenticator keeps a control port status for each Client it is serving. If a Client has been authenticated, its control port status is
said to be Authorized, and the Client can send application data to the LAN through the AP. Otherwise, the control port status is
said to be Unauthorized, and application data cannot traverse the AP.
Typical Message Exchange Using MD5 or TLS
The above graphic displays the typical message exchange when the device and the AP support 802.1X. When an AP acting as
an authenticator detects a wireless station on the LAN, it sends an EAP-Request for the user's identity to the terminal. In turn,
the terminal responds with its identity, and the AP relays this identity to an authentication server, which is typically an external
RADIUS server.
7 - 44
Dolphin® 9500 Series Mobile Computer User's Guide

Advertisement

Table of Contents

Troubleshooting

loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Dolphin 9550Dolphin 9501Dolphin 9551

Table of Contents